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by bostonpete
1890 days ago
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> However, an electron traveling back in time would appear as a positron, so if that what was going on we should be seeing a fairly equal number of positrons as we do electrons, as the one electron rushes around to appear as an electron where it needs to. What about this part of the article though...? "According to Feynman he raised this issue with Wheeler, who speculated that the missing positrons might be hidden within protons."
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In the Standard Model there is a sea of virtual particles in the nucleus, but they're virtual and hence not real in the sense that the positron in the One Electron model would have to be. At least that's my understanding.
Also, electrons can travel over large distances, CRT monitors do that all the time for example. So I'm not entirely sure how Wheeler imagined hiding the positrons in the nucleus would solve the whole positron problem.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark#History